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Transcript
European Renaissance and
Reformation
Notes
Section 1
Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance
• Main Idea
– The Italian Renaissance
was a rebirth of learning
that produced many
great works of art and
literature.
• Why it matters now
– Renaissance art and
literature still influence
modern thought and
modern art.
Renaissance
• Explosion of creativity
in art and writing
(rebirth)
• Stimulated by
Crusades and the
history around them
• Starts in Italy
• Lasts 1300-1600
Italy
• City-states
– Large urban centers that
stimulated trade
• Merchants
– Not inherit social rank so
surrounded with fine
wares
– Show individual
achievement through
goods
• Looked to Greeks and
Romans for inspiration
Classical and Worldly Values
• Humanism
– Studying classical texts
– Intellectual movement that
focused on human potential and
achievements
– Allowed to enjoy life without
offending God
• Secular
– More concerned with worldly
rather than spiritual matters
– Even church officials are living
lavish lifestyles
• Patrons
– Financial supporters of the arts
Renaissance Man
• Universal man, trying
to become schooled
in all the arts
• Dancing, writing,
wrestling, painting,
sculpting
Renaissance Woman
• Woman, especially upper
class were to be
educated in the arts
• Still not expected to
participate in politics
• Supposed to inspire art
not make it
Renaissance Revolutionizes Art
• Continued use
of religious
subjects but
used realistic
styles copied
from Greeks and
Romans
• Perspective
– 3d on a flat
surface
Leonardo da Vinci
• Prime example of a
Renaissance Man
• Sketches,
inventions,
paintings, writer
• Mona Lisa, Last
Supper
Renaissance Writers Change Literature
• Vernacular
– Native language
– Writers write in the vernacular, instead of
Latin
• Machiavelli
– The Prince
• “A prince never lacks legitimate reasons to
break his promise.”
• “Since love and fear can hardly exist together, if
we must choose between them, it is far safer to
be feared than loved.”
• Do what is politically effective not what is
morally right
• In order to do so you might have to lie to your
people
Renaissance
• Sorry it’s a Renaissance Music Video
Answer in complete sentences in your
notes.
1. What are some of the characteristics of the
“Renaissance man” and “Renaissance woman”?
2. How did Italy’s cities help to make it the birthplace of
the Renaissance?
3. What was the attitude of Church leaders and the
wealthy toward the arts? Why?
4. How did study of the classics influence branches of
learning such as history, literature, and philosophy?
5. How is humanism reflected in the Renaissance art?
Explain with examples.
6. What were the differences between the Middle Ages
and the Renaissance in the attitude of the worldly
pleasures?
Perspective Practice
Section 2
Northern Renaissance
• Main Idea
– In the 1400s, the ideas
of the Italian
Renaissance began to
spread to Northern
Europe.
• Why it matters now
– Renaissance ideas such
as the importance of
the individual are a
strong part of modern
thought.
Northern Renaissance Begins
• Population
increasing after
bubonic plague
brought it down
• End of Hundred
Years’ War
• Monarchs are
patrons
• Flanders sees
Renaissance boom
Artistic Ideas Spread
• Italy is invaded by
French causing many
artists and writers to
flee
• German Painters
– Durer
• Wood carvings
• Flemish Painters
– Flanders artistic
center in Northern
Europe
– Van Eyck
• Oil based paintings
The Apocalypse
Arnolfini Wedding
Northern Writers Try to Reform
Society
• Christian Humanists
– Wanted to reform society
– Focus more on the Bible
– Desiderius Erasmus
• The Praise of Folly
– Thomas More
• Utopia
– No place
– Imaginary place without greed,
corruption, and war
• Women’s Reform
– Promoting equality of
education between men and
women
Elizabethan Age
• Renaissance spreads to England
mid 1500s
• Named after Queen Elizabeth I
– Patron
• Shakespeare
– Greatest playwright of all time
– Macbeth, Hamlet, Othello,
Romeo and Juliet, A Midsummer
Night’s Dream
– “foul play,” “good riddance,” “lie
low,” “vanish into thin air”
Printing Spreads Renaissance Ideas
• Johan Gutenberg
– Invents printing press?
• Gutenberg Bible, first
full sized book printed
with movable type
• Books more available
making them cheaper
which allows for more
people to access and
improves literacy
Legacy of the Renaissance
• People worry about individual
living in the here and now
(humanism)
• Literacy rate increases with
inventions like printing press
(people can read information
for themselves)
• Political structures and
religious practices questioned
Renaissance
• All about the Renaissance 2
• http://app.discoveryeducation.com/player/vie
w/assetGuid/33F56C1D-8BF3-487E-A15EBF78403EDC80
• Crash Course Renaissance
Answer in complete sentences in your
notes.
1. How did Albrecht Durer’s work reflect the influence of
the Italian Renaissance?
2. What was one way the Renaissance changed society?
3. Why was the invention of the printing process so
important?
4. How were the works of German painters different
from those of the Flemish painters? Give examples.
5. What reasons did humanists give for wanting to
reform society? Explain.
6. How did the availability of cheap books spread to
learning?
Section 3
Luther Leads the Reformation
• Main Idea
– Martin Luther’s
protest over
abuses in the
Catholic Church
led to the
founding of
Protestant
churches
• Why it matters
now
– Nearly one-fifth
of the Christians
in today’s world
are Protestants
Causes of the Reformation
• Criticisms of the Catholic
Church
– Popes spending
extravagantly
– Illiterate priests
– Priests marrying, drinking
and gambling
• Early Calls for Reform
– Christian Humanists and
others want pope to be
more accountable
Johann Tetzel
Causes of the Reformation
Social
Political
Economic
•Renaissance values
of humanism and
secularism led
people to question
the Church
•Printing press
helped spread ideas
critical of the
Church
•Powerful
monarchs
challenged the
Church as the
supreme power in
Europe
•Many leaders
viewed the pope as
a foreign ruler that
challenged his
authority
•European princes
and kings were
jealous of the
Church’s wealth
•Merchants and
others resented
having to pay taxes
to the Church
Religious
•Some Church
leaders had
become worldly
and corrupt
•Many people
found Church
practices such as
the sale of
indulgences
unacceptable
Luther Challenges the Church
• Martin Luther
– Monk who questioned the Catholic
Church
• 95 Theses
– Paper arguing what’s wrong with
the Catholic Church
– Especially Johann Tetzel
– 10/31/1517 posted formal
statements on a castle church
– Spreads quickly
• Indulgence
– Selling release from sins for money
– Pardon merchants
Luther’s Teachings
• Luther’s actions leads to the
Reformation
– Religious reform movement against
the Catholic Church
• Luther’s Teachings
– People could win salvation only by
faith in God’s gift of forgiveness
– All Church teaching should be clearly
based on the words of the Bible. Both
the pope and Church traditions were
false authorities. (rejects Pope’s
authority)
– All people in faith were equal. People
did not need priests to interpret the
Bible.
Response to Luther
• Pope’s Threat
– Excommunication, Luther does not
take back statements
• Emperor’s Opposition
– Charles V issues Edict of Worms
declaring Luther a heretic who
should be punished for not
recanting
– Could not be given shelter
• Lutherans
– Followers of Lutheran
– Start own beliefs and structure
Germany at War
• Some German princes agree
with Luther while others use it
for personal gain
– Seize Church lands
– Those that oppose the Church
but are still Christian are known
as Protestants
– Peace of Augsburg is reached
by Charles V
• Each German prince could choose
their religion
• Ends family fighting
England Becomes Protestant
• Henry VIII wants a son
– Needs to
divorce(annulment) his
wife which Church law
does not allow for
• Annul
– Set aside, like it never
happened
– Pope turns him down
– Catherine’s nephew is
king of Rome
Reformation Parliament
• Reformation Parliament
– Approves Act of Supremacy
• Puts Henry in charge of
Church of England
– Keeps Catholic traditions to
keep his people from
getting upset
– Thomas More does not
accept that the Catholic
Church is out of England,
told to recant, is beheaded
Consequences of Henry’s Changes
• Henry does get son but
goes through many
wives
• England has trouble
with going from
Protestant to Catholic
to Protestant
• Queen Elizabeth I
helps bring England
together and starts the
Anglican Church
For Those of You Playing at Home
Elizabeth Restores Protestantism
• Anglican Church
– Appealing to moderate Catholics
and Protestants
– Important to appeal to the middle
• Other challenges
– Struggles with others wanting to
control England (Philip II, Catholic
king of Spain)
– Money issues like the exploration of
the Americas
Answer in complete sentences in your
notes.
1. What political, economic, and social factors helped
bring about the reformation?
2. From where did the term Protestantism originate?
3. What impact did Henry VIII’s actions have on England
in the second half of the 1500s?
4. Explain how Elizabeth I was able to bring a level of
religious peace to England?
5. Do you think Luther or Henry VIII had a better reason
to break with the church? Provide details to support
your answer.
6. How did the Catholic Church respond to Luther’s
teachings? Why do you think this was so?
Section 4
Reformation Continues
• Main Idea
– As Protestant reformers divided over beliefs, the
Catholic Church made reforms
• Why it matters now
– Many Protestant churches began during this
period, and many Catholic schools are the result
of reforms in the Church
Calvin Continues the Reformation
• John Calvin Formalizes Protestant Ideas
– Only 8 when Reformation started, he was
influenced by it
• Institutes of the Christian Religion
– People are sinful by nature
– Predestination
• Only a few people were chosen to be saved by God,
“elect”
• Calvinism
– Religion based on John Calvin’s teachings
• Theocracy
– Ideal government which is led by religious
leaders
• Presbyterians
– Inspired by Calvin, John Knox returns to Scotland
and starts his version of Calvinism
– Led by religious leaders called Presbyters
Other Protestant Reformers
• Anabaptists
– Baptize again
– Separate church and state
– Refused to fight in wars
– Persecuted by Protestants and Catholics
– Mennonites and Amish
Catholic Reformation
• Some have called it the Counter Reformation since it is
a response to the Protestant Reformation
• Ignatius of Loyola
– Founds Jesuits
– Layout day to practices of devotion
• Reforming Popes
– Paul III
• Approves Jesuit order and starts investigation
• Seek out heretics
• Council of Trent
–
–
–
–
Church’s interpretation of Bible is final
Not saved by faith alone need to do good works and faith
Bible and Church are equally important
Indulgences are valid expressions of faith
Catholic Reformation Continues
• Pope Paul IV
– Carries out decrees
– Index of Forbidden
Books
• Books considered
offensive to the
Catholic Church
including Protestant
Bibles
Legacy of the Reformation
• Religious Effects
– Cost lives in religious persecution
– Formal beliefs and churches become more unified
• Social Effects
– All religions are stressing education
– Women still do not see improvement in rights
• Political Effects
– Catholic Church no longer most powerful institution in
Europe like it was during the Middle Ages
– People even more willing to question their beliefs and
political structures
Answer in complete sentences in your
notes.
1. What was Calvin’s idea of the “elect” and their place
in society?
2. What role did noblewomen play in the Reformation?
3. What were the goals of Jesuits?
4. How did the Reformation set the stage for the
modern world? Give examples.
5. Why do you think the church wanted to forbid people
to read certain books?
6. How did steps taken by Paul III and Paul IV to reform
the Catholic Church differ from Protestant reforms?
Support your answer with details from the text.